L2 update from the bench:
I needed to move the adjuster-stop two teeth in order to get less gas flow at the lowest setting...

...& it's been happy ever since.

I have it to observe for a couple more days before it's getting shipped out, but I'm pretty happy with how it's running. Plus it still has that great
ping!
Another thing I was thinking about was I saw the topic of Line1 & older Dupont lid angle pop up again on the reddit forum recently, & that is an interesting topic of discussion, here is what I know.
I can only speak on Line1 "BS" models, but the cause is wear on the lid-stop pad located on the bottom of the 'castle'. On the BS models, I've seen three specific factory variants for the lid stop pad. The original design (I'm guessing) is the flat brass area on the underside of the castle for the lid-stop to hit. That's what causes the wear over time. Version 2 (probably) has a thin flat steel plate pinned into the brass area. Version3 (I'm guessing) has a wide steel cylinder pressed into the brass area. From what I've seen, the plain brass versions wear the fastest, where the lid will start walking up as it wears, until it finally frees itself past the 'castle'.
The thin steel plate versions tend to wear the same way, but take longer for the steel to wear out. The steel cylinder post versions are probably the most durable factory solution. Also, I've noticed that the lighters with the wide steel post for a stop pad tend to have lids that open slightly farther than the others, it's just how they are. It's like a degree difference.
If I see a brass lid stop pad area with no wear, I leave it (!). It will still take years for that to wear through to where the lid even starts to change position, & btw I have a custom fix for that! So if I see the brass area with wear then I do my custom fix, which I have yet to see fail. If I see the thin steel pinned plate, I'll leave it if it looks new or with minimal wear, but if it looks bad then I'll remove it & do my fix as before. I have seen those thin steel plates wear badly enough to need my fix. If I see the wide steel cylinder post, I think I've always been able to leave those even though they usually open slightly wider to begin with, as mentioned. I don't think I've seen one with the wide cylinder for the lid-stop have bad wear. I think my current daily has it (the wide steel cylinder stop-pad), so guess I'm testing it now.
My Line1 template:
I'll use this to fine-tune my custom lid stop pads after install when needed. I traced this off of one of my 'zero-wear' Line 1s with the original brass pad.
I don't know how many of these I've checked, but I check every one of them that I refresh, & have installed a bunch of lid stop pads whenever needed.
Before I started sending them out to other people, I ran them on my daily for probably around a year & checking it a few times before calling it a good fix. Since then I've installed it on a few more units that I dailied for at least some period of time. I use mine all the time. If one of my customers comes back with one of my pads having worn out or let go after 5 or 7 or 10+ years, I would probably clean it out & install the same thing again & say you're good for another 5 or 7 or 10+ years.
The last group of L1s that I refreshed had all three pad variants across them, but none of them needed my custom pads.